Reviews‘Final Frontiers is path breaking not only in being the first book-length study of non-Anglophone Indian science fiction, but also in Mukherjee’s provocative consideration of the form alongside the “combined and uneven” historical axes of Cold War Non-Alignment, Nehruvian techno-scientific policy, and Indian modernization in the twentieth-century world-system. This intelligent, sophisticated, and scrupulous book makes a much-needed contribution to postcolonial studies, science fiction studies, world literature studies, and cultural studies and will no doubt inform scholarly conversation in these fields for some time to come.' <br />Eric D. Smith, University of Alabama in Huntsville
'This is an exciting and vital new work in the field of sf studies. Its focus on an under-represented set of authors is welcome; its analytical frameworks are contemporary and productive, and give new and exciting insights and directions to the fields of sf studies, energy humanities and world-literature.' <br />Rhys Williams, University of Glasgow<b></b><b></b>
'<i>Final Frontiers</i> is a meticulously researched and engagingly argued book that foregrounds an sf tradition largely unknown outside of South Asia.'<br />Suparno Banerjee, <i>Science Fiction Studies</i>